San Bernardino city needs jobs and businesses to bouy our infrastructure, and the following article, written by K. Warsh & J. Bush, adds credibility to that belief:
“Policy makers should cease the barrage of ad hoc, short-term policy initiatives. How about checks in the mail to spur spending? Cash for clunkers to move auto inventories? Fast trains and faster Internet? Mortgage modification programs and fleeting tax credits to re-stoke home ownership?
Inducing consumers to do today what they would otherwise do tomorrow is hardly a grand strategy. Hundreds of billions in “stimulus” spending has stimulated little but more debt. Forty-eight months have passed since the onset of the financial crisis, 26 months since the recession technically ended. Yet job creation remains remarkably weak, and markets deeply uneasy.
We can’t go on like this.”
I firmly believe that San Bernardino can have a better tomorrow and a greater business footprint. To our potential businesses, I’m committed to accomodate business stakeholders to our community by reducing red-tape and high fees. We want your business and I will certainly extend a welcome mat for you to transact business in San Bernardino. These are tough times, economically, and we stand to be in this tumult for the next few years. I will do everything possible to attract businesses that are committed to offer valuable services, great products, and value pricing for our residents. To residents, I have heard repeatedly that you want more choices in shopping venues. Your clamor for more shopping venues, alternatives from leaving San Bernardino to other nearby shopping malls, and the comfort of shopping your local retailer for goods and services, has not fallen on deaf ears. Buy San Bernardino, shop San Bernardino, and, in doing so you place confidence in welcoming more businesses to our city.
For more on this article, see Wall Street Journal’s article, ” A New Strategy for Economic Growth: Growth is not just about economics. Growth unleashes human potential.”






